Indoeuropean Lord's Prayer in Sanskrit Slavic Baltic - Dyeus Pater - God of Three Kings of Persia.

Roots of gramatical diferfences between Indoeuropean Languages.
Mistery of The Lord's Prayer.
00:00 - This is The End - SkyFall
00:25 - Best English ever! Polishman in KZread
01:00 - Indoeuropean and Semitic semiOtic connection
02:00 Mistery of The God - Djaus Pitar NOS!
02:35 - Grammar. Not so different as you thought
03:44 Risky Proposition: Pali Language - Lord's Prayer
04:50 Sanskrit - NOT AVESTAN! Mistake
05:55 - Start comparision Deus Pater Noster in Heaven Djaus Pitar Father od Sky
10:23 Divine or divinish? Wonder Girls and Daemons. Holy or Hellish?
14:49 Halloween be Thy NAME
16:23 Thy Kingdom Let come to us! Raja Regnum
16:53 Our Father od Sky AGAIN
19:50 Rye Rich Raja Rex God zboże bogactwo Reich
22:11 Thy Will chuć choču icchia chęć wola be bad kr create do dzieła
23:58 How Indoeuropean became different Languages ?
31:00 secret of loss the flexibility of Language decided to loss the comprehensibility
32:00 conclusion
33:00 digressions
35:00 Wonder Miracles Devas Heavenly Slavic God of The Rising Sun - Swarog and Svargastha Pita in Sanskrit
38:58 Three Mags - King from Persia - Maha Raja Mega Magnus Moc Możny
short recording of Latvian and Prussian from video about its Languages on@ilovelanguages0124 channel.
Best channel of Slavic poliglots:
@Slaweniskadela
Latvian Polish Slavic Vedic Pali bhasa #sanskrit #slavic #latin #pali

Пікірлер: 28

  • @PolishSound
    @PolishSound6 ай бұрын

    Listen to MIDDLE Polish kzread.info/dash/bejne/l2mZxMubXcy_ZLA.htmlfeature=shared and tell me how it sound for You i compare to modern Polish other slavic and indoeuropean languages. Thanks

  • @morshedalmahi3418
    @morshedalmahi34185 ай бұрын

    Bengali : He [O] Amader [Our] Shorgo-bashi [Heaven-dwelling] Pita [Father] , Tomar [Thy] Nam [Name] Pujito [Hallowed] Hok [Be] .

  • @slavman1945
    @slavman19456 ай бұрын

    Hi. Sanskrit Speaker here Found this video interesting!

  • @PolishSound

    @PolishSound

    6 ай бұрын

    I will be grateful if you tell me where my reading of Sanskrit has errors and whether it is browned. Greetings

  • @slavman1945

    @slavman1945

    6 ай бұрын

    @@PolishSound tbh.. Your sanskrit sounds like you're reading it maybe for the first time. It has a more western accent. But I understand it may be because you're new to it (i guess) or because you're reading it in a latin script. There are parts where we pronounce the sound short or long(this can be known while reading it with the Devanāgari script). Old Sanskrit was also written in Brahmi script(which has connections to Aramaic) but rn Devanagari is widely used. I'd suggest, if you have time, try to learn the sanskrit alphabet and phonetics. Or maybe listen to sanskrit being sung, chanted or spoken.. Also Check her channel: www.youtube.com/@GaieaSanskrit I think she is Greek(from her name). She has quite an accurate pronunciation of Sanskrit. Really Accurate! I've been learning German for some months now. I observed some similarities in Grammar and Word Patterns. German and Sanskrit both have Gender words for non living things.. Oh and also the ability to create new words by joining pre-existing words. And creating longer words/sentences with many words joined as one. I've seen it being done in Sanskrit and German both.. I found it interesting

  • @PolishSound

    @PolishSound

    6 ай бұрын

    I Heard native hindi and Sanskrit but I have a different purpose. The man who suggested reading the text in Sanskrit had the intention of reading it with my natural, Slavic accent. And I did so to give them a sample of this. Besides, I thought under the nickname Rtam that it was someone from India and that he imagined that my Slavic accent would be suitable for it: They wanted to get closer to the speech from before the Dravidian influences, before the breakup of the Indo-Iranians and from the times when phonetics were closer to other peoples Indo-European. I also have no ambition to sound like an Indian :) But thank you very much for your comments, they are interesting information for me.

  • @slavman1945

    @slavman1945

    6 ай бұрын

    @@PolishSound Well it isn't about sounding Indian. Also... Sanskrit has the same sound with no Dravidian influence. In fact sanskrit has influenced Dravidian languages. Sanskrit and Avestan speakers understand and can feel both languages are similar in most parts. This proves that there was no Dravidian influence on Sanskrit. It's preserved well. Sanskrit Grammar is very detailed and has about 4000 grammar rules. But it's interesting to hear you reading Sanskrit yes :) Do you have any Lithuanian friends? Their language hasn't changed much due to geography and isolation. Lithuanian language is close to proto Indo-European and hence the closest to Sanskrit. I'm also learning Cyrillic. Hopefully, I'll try recording myself speaking in Slavic languages. My Serbian Pronunciation is good. I know this from my Serb friend. There's again lots of shared vocabulary between Sanskrit and Serbian. The Balkan Region also has Iranic Influence.. I like how these connect. It would be great if you made a video series mainly focused on different Indo-European cultures and folklore..

  • @slavman1945

    @slavman1945

    6 ай бұрын

    @@PolishSound btw I could understand your sanskrit. so its better than i expected. I rarely hear Europeans speak sanskrit

  • @slavman1945
    @slavman19456 ай бұрын

    12:01 - 'Bhaga' in Sanskrit also means God btw

  • @PolishSound

    @PolishSound

    6 ай бұрын

    That's right. And I denied it? The fact that the one group started using the words Deva to describe the devil and stopped at Baga doesn't mean that the Hindus automatically coined ten terms.

  • @auraledgereal

    @auraledgereal

    2 ай бұрын

    In my native language Sinhala Deva = God Bhaga = Lord ( also God )

  • @slavman1945

    @slavman1945

    2 ай бұрын

    @@auraledgereal Cool. Did you know, the City Bhagdad is related to this word too..

  • @auraledgereal
    @auraledgereal2 ай бұрын

    Hi, Are you a Pole? Slvaic or Iranic Sarmatian descent?

  • @PolishSound

    @PolishSound

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes, I am a Pole from "Pole"

  • @Yash_Alava
    @Yash_Alava6 ай бұрын

    and why can’t foreigners distinguish Polish from Russian, even if the man here speaks with some kind of nasal sounds.

  • @PolishSound

    @PolishSound

    6 ай бұрын

    This is surprising to us because through experience we realize other levels of differences. I think that in the everyday pronunciation of Poles, these nasals are not so clearly audible.

  • @human8454
    @human84543 ай бұрын

    Sanskrit and slavic languages aren't same. So, stop comparing them.

  • @PolishSound

    @PolishSound

    3 ай бұрын

    Why do you think that we shouldn't to compare different languages. I always thought that without differences comparision wouldn't be possible. Dance of differences and similarities is the most impressive and fascinating.

  • @user-sf3dj9is8h

    @user-sf3dj9is8h

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes, but how is that ancient language sanskrit is similar to European languages? For example the European word BOG comes from the sanskrit word Bhag which is the name of vedic God we call God as Bhagwan which means one who is God.

  • @human8454

    @human8454

    3 ай бұрын

    @@user-sf3dj9is8h bhagwan so stop fooling others .why you are so obsessed with illogical things .

  • @PolishSound

    @PolishSound

    3 ай бұрын

    @@user-sf3dj9is8h how do you know it comes from Indian and not the other way around? Because we know the older writing from Sanskrit? Well, so what? maybe there were even more ancient ones, or they didn't need to be written down in other languages. Scriptocentrism is a stupid dogma. and how do you know that the word God (in Slavic) does not have the same ancestor as your bhag? ​

  • @user-sf3dj9is8h

    @user-sf3dj9is8h

    3 ай бұрын

    @@PolishSound that's because of German Indologists of 18th century who have studied these eastern European languages extensively and that's why it's called Indo European languages and because Sanskrit has commonality with almost all Eastern European languages including Latin, no need to be angry.